Archive for the ‘tim tebow’ tag

The most talked about 3rd string QB in sports history. Photo AP via businessinsider.com

Seriously?

The 3rd string quarterback of a mediocre NFL team is in the news, literally every day. Multiple times per day.

Why is there so much press surrounding Tim Tebow?

Just this week, we learned he broke up with his girlfriend, that he’s disappointed about being passed over for the starting gig the last week of the season, that he could have run the wildcat if asked, that he may be heading to Jacksonville, that some ESPN analyst thinks he’s a fraud, that the Jets should just cut him now, and that he would have done whatever his coach asked him. Of the 50-someodd articles in my RSS feed just now, there were no less than 10 related to Tebow.

Why?? Why is he constantly in the news? Is it because he plays for the Jets? I didn’t realize the Jets were such a newsworthy football team. Is it because he’s in New York and there’s just more sports media per square foot there than elsewhere? Possibly. Is it because the closest city to ESPN headquarters in New York and ESPN employs far too many columnists and analysts? Possibly. Is it because Tebow is a former Heisman trophy winner? Doubtful; there’s been numerous Heisman winners who were awful in the pros. Is it because he’s amazingly talented and people really thought he’d be the savior of the NFL? I doubt it; every analysis piece I read seems to come with stated opinions of just how mediocre a player he is.

Can it stop? I’m really, really tired of hearing about him. Most ardent football fans couldn’t name the backups of most NFL teams outside their own rooting interests; why does sports nation need to know the every move of Tim Tebow??

This is your semi-weekly/periodic wrap-up of Nats and other baseball news that caught my eye. No better time than today to publish, since there’s not much else going on Christmas day.

Nationals In General

Bus Leagues Baseball profiles Matthew Purke, with a nice scouting report and recap of his journey to the Nats franchise.

Nice little bench move here: Nats claimed infielder Carlos Rivera from Philadelphia’s waivers and stuck him on the 40-man. He theoretically can play both SS and 3b, though reports are that his SS defense is suspect. I’m not going to nit pick moves like this and the Mike Cameron signing; our farm system kind of has a gap in terms of player development from the last Bowden draft years, so we are missing these roster-augmentation players that otherwise would be filled from within. Soon though with the college-heavy drafts of the past couple years we should have all the spare parts we need sitting in AAA so that we’re not signing mid 30’s utility players and claiming mediocre players.

Welcome to 2012’s version of Jerry Hairston; Mark DeRosato sign with the Nats and be our super utility guy. Can’t argue with the move; he fills a need, is willing to be a bench player, and can play a bunch of positions.

Obviously the big news this cycle is the Gio Gonzalez move. Frequent readers here saw a very healthy discussion in the past week in this space. I’ll post some reaction links here not posted elsewhere: Buster Olney‘s blog (the take away for me is how badly Oakland’s fans seem to be reacting), Jim Bowden‘s video reaction and his description how the deal went down (the interesting takeaway being how the 2nd player thrown into the deal from Oakland’s side turning the tide). Keith Law values our prospects highly and says we overpaid. Another prospect-heavy analyst John Sickelsanalyzes our outgoing prospects (surprisingly Sickels says the A’s got “fair value” instead of calling it a loss for the Nats as Law did). Here’s Tim Brown‘s reaction, plus Ken Rosenthal‘s original report. Lastly, fangraph’s David Fung graphically analyzes projected WARs and determines that we gave up nearly twice the value in future production, which involves quite a leap of trust that all four of these guys pan out to their potential. Lastly, here’s Baseball Prospectus’ take on both sides; not nearly as glowing for the 4 prospects gained as I thought they would be.

Free Agents/Player Transaction News

Roy Oswalt is considering one-year deals, immediately bringing nearly every MLB team into the discussions. I’d love to have him on the Nats but suspect that he may end up in a situation that makes it easier for him to get one more relatively lucrative FA contract. I.e., an easier division that’s closer to home. Imagine him in San Diego against weaker NL west teams. With the Gonzalez signing though, my guess is that we’re out of the FA pitcher race.

Interesting take on the Yu Darvish bidding results and the Toronto loss from Buster Olney (insider only), intimating that all the talk about the Toronto interest was overblown.

Great points by David Schoenfeld on espn, pointing out another similar article on Grantland, talking about the “Prospect Mania” that has become the norm in baseball over the past 10 years. Ironically, this same issue was seen in our Gonzalez deal; are our prospects really that good, or are we over-valuing them and their potential?

General Baseball News

College Baseball Newspaper announces its pre-season Collegiate All American team. From first glance, Florida looks really strong (4 guys on the first team, another four on the 2nd team, wow). South Carolina returns two all-american starters, virtually guaranteeing weekend series wins all year. Finally Texas has 2 first team, 3 second teamers just in its rotation. Too early to predict Florida versus Texas in the Omaha final in June 2012?

George Washington, a lesser Div-1 baseball program that has given the Nats some later-round org players in recent years, is renovating Barcroft park in South Arlington, where they play their home games. They’re putting in artificial turf, nicer facilities and a nicer snack bar. Nice. It was already a nice place to see good collegiate baseball; now it should be this much better.

Documentation/Actual testimony from a player who won an appeal of his PED positive test. Latest rumor I read about Ryan Braun is that he was taking something for an STD. I can’t find a link so perhaps its just that; a ridiculous rumor.

Man, I can’t wait to see this soap opera in Spring Training; former Marlins manager says that Hanley Ramirezwon’t go to third easily.

Nice shirt, Mike Napoli. (NSFW, in other words, “Not Safe for Work.”) Not really; you can barely see the “R-rated” part.

I wonder why they left the field? A current picture of Detroit’s old stadium. We were in Detroit 3yrs ago and drove by this stadium as it was only in partial de-construction.

LA Dodger’s plans to sell dealt a blow by a bankrupcy judge. Or were they? I’m not entirely clear how this ruling affects anything frankly. As long as Frank McCourt is removed from the picture, I think everyone will be happy.

General News; other

Categorize this in the “people who don’t have a sense of humor, ever” department: Pat Robertson found the hilarious Tim Tebow skit on SNL last weekend “disgusting.” Hey Pat; I find your opinions on race, discrimination, acceptance, tolerance, and your stated stances on the reasons that Hurricane Katrina, the Haitian earthquake and 9-11 happened to be “disgusting” as well.

This link was ironic for me, in that my family just had the same discussion about what is the best Xmas movie of all time. Jim Caple presents a 64-team bracket for Xmas movies. I think the selection committee screwed over “Scrooged,” giving it only a 9 seed. In another bracket, its a regional winner :-).

We hear from Albert Pujol‘s wife Dierdre, who says she was “mad at God” for having to leave St. Louis. I’m sorry; if you are “forced” to leave St. Louis so that you can earn $254M dollars instead of $210M, you don’t get to invoke “God” or any self-pity whatsoever. Is Pujol’s wife as out-of-touch as most modern athletes are? This almost reminds me of the infamous line from Latrell Sprewell, who turned down a $21M contract extension by saying that “I’ve got my family to feed.”

DC-area native Joe Saunders was non-tendered by the Diamondbacks after failing to reach a multi-year deal. There were plenty of other non-tenders to talk about, but the West Springfield graduate immediately becomes a rather high-end FA starting pitcher when compared to the rest of the market. I don’t think he’s worth pursuing necessarily; he isn’t going to give us anything that we probably couldn’t expect to get out of Ross Detwiler at a fraction of the cost, and perhaps this is just a negotiating ploy by the Arizona GM. But its definitely fair to say that his arbitration cost would have probably been more than his actual worth on an annual salary basis.

The Yu Darvishdeadline passed on 5pm Wednesday, and all we know is that someone actually bid, and that there were a number of serious bidders. The NPB has four days to formally “accept” the offer, so will not know til next tuesday who “won.” I heard on SportsTalk 980 that the Nationals did not submit a bid, and here’s Adam Kilgoreconfirming in print. I’ve posted my opinion on Darvish in the past; i’m sure he’s talented, but don’t think he’s a 9-figure risk. Unsubstantiated early rumors list the Toronto Blue Jays as the posting winners.

Good for Josh Willingham, signing a 3yr deal in Minnesota. Yes we could have used his offense in 2011. Willingham’s 2011 bWAR? 1.8 hitting in a horribly bad pitcher’s stadium. The players we got for him? Henry Rodriguez‘s 0.2 and Corey Brown‘s 0 (and subsequent removal from the 40-man roster). That was a good piece of business!

General Baseball News

I kind of agree with Phil Wood‘s take on Ryan Braun‘s positive test, as printed here. If a player has been tested again and again, and then (say) gets a test mixed up or hits a false positive, and that test is leaked to the world, wouldn’t you be pretty pissed as well? I’m not saying that’s what happened here (since I have no involvement whatsoever), but such a scenario would play out pretty unfairly to the athlete in question. One can only hope that the “insanely high” levels of testosterone were either a testing mistake or a flawed test. Or possibly that Braun was surprised by the timing of the test and was doing what Victor Conte describes as a “truck sized loop hole” in the baseball drug testing.

This story cracks me up: Derek Jeter sends the same “break-up present” consisting of a gift-basket with a hand-signed baseball to all his “conquests.” How did we find this out? Because he had a repeat hookup and apparently forgot that he had already sent one to her. Oops. Here’s the question: how do these women certify the signed baseball? Does it also come with a certificate of authenticity?

The verb “Tebowing” is now being recognized as an official word. At least its not ebonics. At least not everyone is taking this thing seriously; see here for a fantastic new Tebowing-themed beer label.

Thank god for this clause in the new CBA: players are going to be banned from getting corporate logo tattoos. Its too bad; I’m pretty sure I just heard that Stephen Strasburg is getting the Dairy Queen logo tattooed on the small of his back, tramp-stamp style.